Government Exploring Roadmap to Make Green Urea Production a Reality in INDIA

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Green Urea Production in India — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2015 New Urea Policy 2015 announced — maximise indigenous production, promote energy efficiency, rationalise subsidy burden.
2018–2023 Revival of 5 shut fertilizer units (Gorakhpur, Sindri, Barauni, Ramagundam, Talcher) under Atmanirbhar Bharat; projected additional capacity of 63.5 LMTPA. [S6]
January 2023 Cabinet approves National Green Hydrogen Mission (NGHM) — outlay ₹19,744 crore, target 5 MMT green hydrogen/year by 2030, associated 125 GW renewable energy capacity. [S2]
2023–24 SECI issues landmark Green Ammonia tender to decarbonise India's fertilizer sector; allocates 7,24,000 TPA green ammonia supply linked to 13 fertilizer units. [S4]
2025 India's indigenous urea capacity reaches 283.74 LMTPA — record level under Atmanirbhar Bharat push. [S5]
April 2026 GAPA and GASA agreements exchanged between fertilizer companies and green ammonia producers — commercial framework established. [S3]
June 2026 Pre-EOI Meeting at PDIL Noida; EOI formally invited for Green Urea Plants. [S1]

Predecessors/Related Initiatives: - Talcher Fertilizers Limited: Coal-gasification-based urea plant (not green, but transitional) with PDIL as consultant — a parallel decarbonisation pathway. [S6] - National Mission on Sustainable Agriculture (NMSA) — earlier framework for sustainability in the farm input sector.


4. Core Static Facts

Key Definitions: - Green Hydrogen: Hydrogen produced by electrolysis of water using renewable electricity — zero direct CO₂ emissions. - Green Ammonia: NH₃ synthesised from green hydrogen + N₂ (air); the feedstock for green urea. - Green Urea: Urea (CO(NH₂)₂) manufactured using green ammonia instead of fossil-fuel (natural gas/naphtha) derived ammonia. Eliminates Scope 1 emissions from ammonia synthesis. - Grey Ammonia/Urea: Conventional production via Steam Methane Reforming (SMR) of natural gas — highly carbon-intensive. - GAPA: Green Ammonia Purchase Agreement (signed by fertilizer plants). - GASA: Green Ammonia Supply Agreement (signed by green ammonia producers).

Institutional Framework:

Entity Role
Department of Fertilizers (DoF) Nodal department; issues EOI, facilitates agreements
Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilizers Parent ministry of DoF
PDIL (Projects & Development India Ltd.) Public-sector consultant; hosts Pre-EOI; CMD = Dr. K.K. Pathak
SECI (Solar Energy Corporation of India) Issues/manages green ammonia tenders; under MNRE
MNRE Nodal ministry for NGHM
NTPC Key PSU stakeholder in Pre-EOI meeting

Key Numbers:

Parameter Value
NGHM Budget ₹19,744 crore [S2]
Green Hydrogen Target (2030) 5 MMT per annum [S2]
Renewable Energy Target linked to NGHM ~125 GW by 2030 [S2]
SECI Green Ammonia Allocation 7,24,000 TPA [S4]
Number of fertilizer units linked to SECI tender 13 [S4]
Contract duration (GAPA/GASA) 10 years [S3]
GHG Abatement potential ~50 MMT CO₂/year [S2]
Forex savings expected ~$2.5 billion over 10 years [S3]
Jobs creation potential (NGHM) >6 lakh [S2]
Import reduction target >₹1 lakh crore [S2]
Current indigenous urea capacity 283.74 LMTPA [S5]

Enabling Policy/Mission: - National Green Hydrogen Mission (NGHM) — approved by Cabinet, January 2023; implemented by MNRE. [S2] - New Urea Policy 2015 — foundational policy for urea sector efficiency. [S7]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Environmental

Scientific / Technological

Geopolitical / Strategic

Administrative

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The Pre-EOI Meeting for Green Urea Plants (June 2026) was held at PDIL headquarters, Noida. [S1]
  2. Dr. K.K. Pathak chaired the Pre-EOI Meeting — he is simultaneously Joint Secretary, Department of Fertilizers and CMD of PDIL. [S1]
  3. The nodal ministry for the National Green Hydrogen Mission is the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE)not the Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilizers. [S2]
  4. NGHM approved in January 2023 with an outlay of ₹19,744 crore. [S2]
  5. NGHM targets production of at least 5 MMT green hydrogen per annum by 2030. [S2]
  6. SECI (Solar Energy Corporation of India) issued the landmark green ammonia tender — under MNRE, not DoF. [S4]
  7. SECI's tender allocates 7,24,000 TPA green ammonia to 13 fertilizer plants on 10-year contracts. [S3][S4]
  8. Agreements facilitating green ammonia supply are called GAPA (purchase) and GASA (supply). [S3]
  9. Expected forex saving from green ammonia shift: ~$2.5 billion over 10 years. [S3]
  10. NGHM aims to abate ~50 MMT annual GHG emissions and create >6 lakh jobs. [S2]
  11. PDIL (Projects & Development India Limited) is the implementing consultant for green urea plant planning — a public-sector entity. [S1]
  12. India's indigenous urea capacity as of 2025: 283.74 LMTPA (Lakh Metric Tonnes Per Annum). [S5]
  13. Green urea's feedstock pathway: Renewable electricity → Electrolysis → Green H₂ → Haber-Bosch → Green NH₃ → Urea. [S2]
  14. Talcher Fertilizers Limited uses coal gasification (not green hydrogen) as its urea feedstock route — a distinct, non-green pathway also involving PDIL. [S6]
  15. NGHM is linked to a renewable energy capacity addition target of ~125 GW by 2030. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping:

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-III Indian Economy — Agriculture; Energy; Environment & Ecology; Science & Technology
GS-II Government Policies & Interventions; Statutory Bodies
GS-III Infrastructure; Indigenisation of Technology

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "India's transition to green urea production is simultaneously an agricultural, environmental, and strategic imperative. Critically analyse the challenges and opportunities." (GS-III, 15 marks)
  2. "The National Green Hydrogen Mission (NGHM) seeks to decarbonise India's fertilizer sector. Examine its potential impact on energy security, farmer economics, and India's climate commitments." (GS-III, 10 marks)
  3. "Discuss the role of Public Sector Undertakings (PSUs) like PDIL, SECI, and NTPC in India's green energy transition, with reference to the green urea initiative." (GS-II/III, 10 marks)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Green Hydrogen Mission (NGHM) Foundational policy enabling green ammonia/urea; all numbers and targets interlinked
Urea Subsidy & Nutrient Based Subsidy (NBS) Regime Green urea viability depends on subsidy restructuring; fiscal implications
India's NDC & Net-Zero 2070 Commitments Green urea = industrial decarbonisation pathway; part of India's UNFCCC obligations
Nano Urea (IFFCO) Parallel strategy for reducing conventional urea consumption; complements green urea
PM Gati Shakti & Fertilizer Logistics Green urea plants will need renewable energy supply chains and gas pipeline realignment
SECI & Renewable Energy Tenders SECI is the key procurement arm linking green H₂ producers to fertilizer companies
India's Critical Mineral Strategy Electrolysers require platinum-group metals, rare earths — links to import dependency
Coal Gasification (Talcher Project) Contrasting transitional pathway for urea; same implementing agency (PDIL)

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong ministry for NGHM: Aspirants confuse DoF/Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilizers as the NGHM nodal agency. Correct: NGHM is under MNRE; DoF is the demand-side implementer for fertilizer applications.
  2. Confusing SECI's role: SECI is under MNRE — it issues green ammonia tenders. Do not place SECI under the Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilizers or DoF.
  3. Green urea ≠ Nano Urea: Nano Urea (IFFCO liquid urea) is a different technology (nanoparticle-based, reduces quantity needed) — not related to the green hydrogen pathway.
  4. PDIL misconception: PDIL (Projects & Development India Limited) is a public-sector engineering consultancy under DoF, not a fertilizer manufacturer — it designs and consults on plants; it does not produce urea.
  5. Assuming green urea is commercially operational: As of June 2026, India is at the Pre-EOI stage — green urea plants are in the planning/exploration phase. Do not state it as a deployed programme.

11. Sources